Randolph M. Selig, President of The Selig Capital Group, has been an investment banker since 1976 and has completed over 200 corporate finance transactions with a cumulative value in excess of $10 billion involving mergers and acquisitions, private placements, leveraged buyouts, underwriting of debt and equity, and long-term currency swaps.
Upon completion of his MBA degree at Stanford, Mr. Selig went to Wall Street as a corporate finance associate at Lehman Brothers. As an associate, he worked on a number of transactions for clients such as Levi Strauss, Crocker Bank, Crown Zellerbach, and Flintkote. In 1978, Mr. Selig joined the emerging corporate finance department of Bankers Trust Company, where he developed a tax-exempted placement business and received Wall Street Journal attention for developing a private placement form of shelf registration. In 1981, Mr. Selig was elected to the board of directors of Bankers Trust International in London and became Managing Director of Bankers Trust International (Asia), resident in Tokyo. Mr. Selig was one of the original architects of the currency swap market, which is in excess of a $100 billion market today. In 1984, Mr. Selig returned to the U.S. and joined the corporate finance department of Bear, Stearns in San Francisco, focusing on debt and equity financings, mergers and acquisitions, and leveraged buyouts. Clients included Bio Rad Laboratories, Xicor, Pope and Talbot, and Pizza Time Theatre. Mr. Selig founded The Selig Capital Group in 1987 to provide investment banking services to entrepreneurial and environmental clients.
In the past two decades, Mr. Selig has served on numerous corporate and advisory boards of directors. His significant involvement in community service includes five-year stints as a Little League Baseball Coach and an Assistant Scout Master. Mr. Selig has worked on environmental projects in South Africa, Jamaica, the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico as well as in the Southwestern part of the U.S. He currently is actively involved as an Environmental Steward at the Bothin Marsh in Mill Valley.
Mr. Selig earned a BA in Mathematics and Psychology, Summa Cum Laude, from the University of Bridgeport and an MBA in General Management and Public Policy from Stanford University.
Upon completion of his MBA degree at Stanford, Mr. Selig went to Wall Street as a corporate finance associate at Lehman Brothers. As an associate, he worked on a number of transactions for clients such as Levi Strauss, Crocker Bank, Crown Zellerbach, and Flintkote. In 1978, Mr. Selig joined the emerging corporate finance department of Bankers Trust Company, where he developed a tax-exempted placement business and received Wall Street Journal attention for developing a private placement form of shelf registration. In 1981, Mr. Selig was elected to the board of directors of Bankers Trust International in London and became Managing Director of Bankers Trust International (Asia), resident in Tokyo. Mr. Selig was one of the original architects of the currency swap market, which is in excess of a $100 billion market today. In 1984, Mr. Selig returned to the U.S. and joined the corporate finance department of Bear, Stearns in San Francisco, focusing on debt and equity financings, mergers and acquisitions, and leveraged buyouts. Clients included Bio Rad Laboratories, Xicor, Pope and Talbot, and Pizza Time Theatre. Mr. Selig founded The Selig Capital Group in 1987 to provide investment banking services to entrepreneurial and environmental clients.
In the past two decades, Mr. Selig has served on numerous corporate and advisory boards of directors. His significant involvement in community service includes five-year stints as a Little League Baseball Coach and an Assistant Scout Master. Mr. Selig has worked on environmental projects in South Africa, Jamaica, the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico as well as in the Southwestern part of the U.S. He currently is actively involved as an Environmental Steward at the Bothin Marsh in Mill Valley.
Mr. Selig earned a BA in Mathematics and Psychology, Summa Cum Laude, from the University of Bridgeport and an MBA in General Management and Public Policy from Stanford University.